Terrorism (with Jonathan R. White) - Partially Examined Life

Mar 09, 2013, 09:26 PM

We read:

*Donald Black’s “The Geometry of Terrorism” (2004) *J. Angelo Corlett’s “Can Terrorism be Morally Justified?” (1996) *Igor Primoratz’s article on terrorism in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2007, revised 2011) *Karl Heinzen’s Murder and Freedom (1853) *Bhagat Singh’s “The Philosophy of the Bomb: A Brief Response to Gandhi” (1930) *Carl von Clausewitz’s On War (introduction) (1816ish)

Jon advises the U.S. government and has written textbooks on terrorism. He puts al-Qaeda in historical perspective, helps work through definitions from Black’s “pure terrorism” (which has an “upwards” social geometry requiring both geographic access and cultural difference) to Corlett’s attempt to construct a definition that doesn’t automatically rig the moral question. Primoratz helps us ask whether harming innocents (e.g. in a war where you’re threatened with extinction) is ever justified, and Heinzen and Singh preach violence against violence, where the state itself, being founded on violence, can’t be effectively fought through “soul force” alone. We also discuss how the philosophical questions relate to the practical ones: do we even need a definition, or is a practical scheme of classification sufficient for all practical purposes? Plus, a bit on gun control and the state’s monopoly on force. #Philosophy #terrorism #jonrwhite #War #Clausewitz

Go to the blog: http://www.partiallyexaminedlife.com/2013/03/09/ep72-terrorism/